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7/29/2019 Engaging Civil Society in Governance Processes
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Public Participation Conference
Gauteng Provincial Legislature
Engaging Civil Society in Governance Processes: A Case Study of Victim Support Groups in
Northern Ireland
By: Laura Fowler Graham University of Aberdeen, Department of Sociology
Abstract: This paper draws on the research conducted in the Leverhulme-funded Compromise After
Conflictstudy of victim support groups in Northern Ireland. Specifically, this paper examines the role of
victims groups in achieving the government aims of conflict resolution and reconciliation through the
development of social capital. This paper presents Northern Ireland as a case study to address the
ways in which government policies aimed at building social capital for conflict resolution processes can
be strengthened through the voluntary sector, and specifically, through victims groups. The lessons
that can be drawn from this case study have many implications for policy prescription in other post-
conflict societies. Moreover, this paper will present findings that highlight gaps between government
policies and practice in the voluntary sector. These gaps will be discussed, and the paper will
conclude with some policy prescriptions for government and practitioners on how to bridge these gaps
in order to foster improved civic engagement in governance processes.
I. Introduction
The relationship between government and civil society should be symbiotic, whereby each entitys
contribution to peacebuilding and conflict resolution should have a mutually beneficial outcome. This
paper will investigate whether there is a symbiotic relationship between government and civil society -
vis--vis victims groups - in Northern Ireland, in terms of conflict resolution and peacebuilding through
social capital development. This paper draws from the data gathered in the Leverhulme-funded
Compromise After Conflictstudy at the University of Aberdeen. In particular, this paper is based on
the findings of the authors investigation of social capital development in victim support groups and the
impact of leadership in these organizations. This study has major implications for policy-oriented
research because it is the first of its kind with respect to investigating the perceptions of victim support
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group leaders on victims issues and policy. Drawing from the findings ofCompromise study on
victims groups in Northern Ireland, this paper will present the strengths and weaknesses of
government policy and the work of victim support groups in achieving the aims of government policy
for social capital development and broader peacebuilding aims. Additionally, this paper will propose
some policy recommendations for the legislative audience in order to improve upon existing policies
aimed at building social capital and increasing civil societys engagement with governance processes.
Looking to Northern Ireland as a case study, this paper will highlight universal policy implications for
developing the symbiotic relationship between government and civil society, not only for Northern
Ireland, but also for South Africa and other post-conflict societies.
Prior to embarking on this journey into the findings of the Compromise study of victim support
groups, some background information is essential. To begin, one should note, after four decades of
conflict in Northern Ireland, the country is mourning the loss of around 3,700 lives (McKittrick, et al.,
2007:13; Fay, et al., 1997) and has been left with an estimated 40,000 to 50,000 physically and
psychologically affected surviving victims (McDowell, 2007). While these numbers may seem small to
countries with large populations, one should observe that in Northern Ireland, a country whose
population stands around 1.7 million, these casualties have had a major impact upon society. Indeed,
it has led some in Northern Ireland to proclaim that nearly everyone living there during the conflict was
in some way affected by the violence, and many could be said to be victims (cf. Bloomfield, 1998).
The devastating human impact of the Troubles has led to a situation where victims have become a
marginalized group in society. As a result, policymakers have aimed to reduce social exclusion of
victims and encouraged greater civic engagement in victim support groups.
However, policies aimed at promoting social inclusion of victims have proven to be a real
challenge due to the nature of political and societal division in Northern Ireland. Nevertheless,
government and civil society have been working to reduce social exclusion and marginalization of
victims in Northern Ireland through the development of social capital in victim support groups. In
theory, this aim of promoting social inclusion through the development of social capital should lead to
greater civic engagement with governance processes. In practice, however, the relationship between
government and civil society has not always produced this outcome. This paper will address some of
these gaps between victims policy aimed at promoting social inclusion and the levels of social capital
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and civic engagement in victim support groups. In doing so, the author will point to the positive and
negative implications of these policies and draw policy conclusions aimed at improving the objectives
of the policies. This analysis of policy will benefit policymakers in South Africa by providing a
comparative case study for the most effective ways to engage civil society in governance processes
regarding the promotion of social inclusion of marginalized groups, development of social capital in civil
society and the options for encouraging participative democracy.
In the remaining sections of this paper, the reader will find: 1) A brief explanation of the
research design of the Compromise study that contributed to the findings presented in this paper; 2) A
presentation of the proposed benefits of social capital development for promoting social inclusion; 3)
An overview of relevant victims policy in Northern Ireland; 4) Research findings related to the work of
victim support groups in building social capital and increasing social inclusion of victims under the EU
PEACE Programs and the Victims Strategy; 5) A discussion on the implications of the findings on the
effectiveness of victims policy in Northern Ireland, and wider universal policy implications; and 6) A
conclusion on the effectiveness of policy in the Northern Ireland case study and the authors policy
recommendations for the international audience
II. Research Design
The findings discussed in this paper draw on the fieldwork of the Compromise After Conflictprojects
ethnographic case study of victim support group leaders in Northern Ireland. It is the first study of its
kind to investigate the perceptions of victims group leaders on their roles and their perceptions of
victims policy. The research design of the study employed qualitative methods of data collection and
analysis. Specifically, the author conducted thirty qualitative semi-structured interviews with victims
group leaders over a period of six months. The interviews were then transcribed and analyzed using
qualitative coding data analysis techniques. The interpretations of the data are based on
Postmodernist epistemological assumptions about knowledge and have been corroborated by
interviews with policymakers and by the vast volume of literature on victims issues in Northern Ireland.
The findings discussed in this paper refer to one theme from the larger dataset, and should therefore
be taken as one component of overall research project. For additional context on the data presented
here, please see the authors forthcoming doctoral thesis,An Evaluation of the Social Capital of Victim
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Support Groups in Northern Ireland.
III. Social Inclusion and Social Capital: How are these concepts related?
The era of democratization and peace settlements has long since passed in Northern Ireland and
South Africa, and much progress has been established in terms of peacebuilding and conflict
resolution in both countries. In both countries, the governments have demonstrated a commitment to
meeting the continued needs of victims and survivors, as well as broadening the dividends of
peacebuilding throughout wider society. Now, in both countries, legislators are looking to engage civil
society in governance processes that will have the impact of contributing to a more peaceful society.
Drawing on the theoretical benefits of social capital as proposed by Robert Putnam (2000),
policymakers in Northern Ireland have promoted social inclusion policies aimed at achieving high levels
of social capital through the work of the voluntary sector. Nowhere is this more apparent than in
victims policy and the work of victim support groups. This section will introduce the concepts of social
inclusion and social capital to show the relationship between policies aimed at increasing social
inclusion of marginalized groups (e.g. victims) and the development of social capital.
1. Definitions
To begin, one will benefit from generalized definitions of the concepts and terms employed in this
paper. Thus, when the author refers to civil society, she is referring to civic organizations that are
grounded in communicative interaction as a coordinating mechanism, while at the same time being
subject to state regulatory oversight and protection (Acheson and Milofsky, 2008:63). Additionally,
victim support groups are civic organizations with a common aim of addressing the needs of victims.
Victims are the surviving physically or psychologically injured of violent, conflict-related incidents and
those close relatives or partners who care for them, along with those close relatives or partners who
mourn their dead (OFMDFM, 2002:1). Civic engagement is the act of involving civil society in some
process in the current case, governance processes and participative democracy. Governance
processes are those processes that stem from legislative decision-making. Social inclusion is a
process that involves de-marginalizing excluded social groups. Therefore, a socially inclusive society
is one where people feel valued, their differences respected, their basic needs met and where they
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have dignity (Cappo, 2002). Conversely, social exclusion is the process of being shut out from social,
economic, cultural and political systems which contribute to the social integration of a person into the
community (Cappo, 2002). Finally, social capital is a resource consisting of social networks that are
based on trust and norms of reciprocity (Putnam, 2000). There are two main types of social capital:
bonding social capital reinforces exclusive identities and maintains homogeneity it is inward-looking
and exclusive; whereas, bridging social capital brings people together across diverse social divisions
it is outward-looking and inclusive (cf. Field, 2008:36; Putnam, 2000:22). These definitions will be
employed throughout this paper.
2. The relationship between social inclusion and social capital
Social exclusion is believed to be one of the underlying causes of the conflict in Northern Ireland,
particularly in relation to perceptions of the other. This is especially prevalent in the perceptions of the
world as consisting ofus and them. Therefore, since social exclusion is seen as part of the problem,
then social inclusion should be seen as part of the solution to societal division. This is why a number
of salient government policies have promoted social inclusion as a means of conflict resolution and
peacebuilding as will be discussed in the next section. Policies promoting social inclusion, however,
present a challenge to policymakers, especially with regard to building a more inclusive society. To
this end, savvy policymakers have sought to develop bonding and bridging forms of social capital
through the work of civic organizations to promote the policy aims of social inclusion. This section will
reveal the ways in which social capital development contributes to social inclusion.
Social isolation, exclusion and marginalization have been shown by social scientists to
contribute ill-health, shortened life expectancy, a lack of trust, economic deprivation, a decline in civic
engagement and participative democracy, and the possibility to contribute to conflict, amongst other
problems (cf. Berkman and Glass, 2000; Kawachi and Berkman, 2001; Putnam, 2000; Seeman, 2000;
Wilkinson and Marmot, 2003). Conversely, social inclusiveness, strong social networks and high levels
of social capital have been correlated to improved health and well-being, a decrease in the risk of
dying from all causes, improved socio-economic conditions, an increase in civic engagement and
greater participative democracy, and in some instances, conflict resolution (cf. Aldridge, et al., 2002;
Herreros, 2004; Nan, 2009; Putnam, 1993; 2000; 2007; Varshney, 2001). Therefore, if the aim of
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policy is to overcome social isolation and exclusion, then it would seem appropriate to promote policies
that aim to increase, amongst other things, levels of social capital within society.
One approach that policymakers have taken to develop social capital is to promote bonding
and bridging forms of social capital through endorsing single-identity and cross-community work in civic
organizations. This endorsement is evidenced by the strategic aims and allocation of funding to victim
support groups in Northern Ireland under the European Unions PEACE Programs (SEUPB, 1995;
2000; 2007). It is also evident in the Northern Ireland Council for Voluntary Actions policy manifesto:
Our vision is of a society where all citizens are treated as equals, where sectarianism and discrimination are not
tolerated, and where respect for human rights is regarded as the norm. We want to see a society that is developed
sustainably and that is active and engaged with its democratic structures [] The voluntary and community sector
enshrines the principles of participation and inclusion which should also form the basis of good policy making and
governance [] The voluntary and community sector is a major force for change in Northern Ireland. What the sector
has to offer is a profound experience of civic life of a world where everyone is equally valued as an individual, where
individuals come together for the common good, and where the everyday concerns of normal politics are to the fore. A
vibrant civic culture is critical to a well-functioning, inclusive society. Civic associations have the capacity to achieve
virtuous circles of growing trust, confidence and cohesion. Government increasingly depends on NGOs [] in complex
societies where it can neither know nor do everything [] If supports are not put into place to enable excluded groups to
participate in democracy, then inequalities are exacerbated. The voluntary and community sector fulfils this role through
providing such supports. The not- for-profit ethos of the sector means that it actively seeks to build collective profit
(capital) within economically and socially deprived communities when it is delivering services [] The voluntary and
community sector also has a role to play in reconciling Northern Irelands divided society. Strong civic networks can
offset sectarian divisions and work at community level has the potential to encourage outward-looking and outward-
reaching development rather than inward-looking competitive communities (NICVA, 2006:7)
The idea behind government policy is that a combination of single-identity bonding work, aimed at
increasing levels of trust, confidence and well-being, will compliment cross-community bridging work,
aimed at building better community relations and a shared society. Taken together, these two forms of
social capital contribute to social inclusion, conflict resolution, peacebuilding, and a vibrant civil society
that is engaged in participative democracy. In theory, at least, high levels of social capital should
correlate to the aforementioned outcomes. In reality, however, Northern Ireland is struggling to
capitalize on the high levels of social capital within civil society.
It is the authors contention that although Northern Ireland has high levels of social capital, as
evident in victim support groups, there is a disconnect between civil society and government that has
stymied civic engagement in governance processes. This lack of civic involvement in government
decision-making has limited the impact of participative democracy and worse, if it continues, it could
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lead Northern Ireland back into conflict. Evidence that the peace process is regressing can already be
seen in the increase in dissident bombings and attacks since 2009. Therefore, it is essential that
policymakers understand how to capitalize on Northern Irelands high levels of social capital. This
issue will be addressed in the findings and discussion sections of this paper. First, however, one must
understand the evolution of victims policy to discover where the disconnect between civil society and
government began. The next section will address some of the key developments in victims policy
since 1995.
IV. Evolution of Victims Policy in Northern Ireland 1995-2013
Northern Ireland has a vibrant civil society. There are estimates that the voluntary sector contains as
many as 5,000 civic organizations with a paid workforce of 29,000 workers and 76,000 volunteers
(NICVA, 1998, 2002, 2006). Many of these organizations are the benefactors of the peace dividends
of government grants. In fact, it has been postulated that Northern Ireland has invested more money
in peacebuilding than any other post-conflict society in the world. While it seems impossible to gain an
exact figure for how much has been invested in Northern Irelands peace process, conservative
estimates suggest that at least 1.5 billion has been allocated through grants in and around Northern
Ireland (cf. Brewer, 2010:169). However, if one looks at the various funding programs together, one
can see that these grants total around 3 billion:
International Fund for Ireland - 850 million since 1986 (http://
www.internationalfundforireland.com/)
Ireland Funds - 300 million since 1976 (http://theirelandfunds.org/)
Reconciliation Fund - 23 million since 1999(http://www.dfa.ie/home/index.aspx?id=345)
EU PEACE funding - 2 billion from 1995 to 2013 (SEUPB, 1995, 2000, 2007)
While the exact amount of money that has been spent on peace in Northern Ireland is uncertain, one
can be certain that this investment must have made some impact in the past two decades. However,
whether this impact has met the social inclusion and social capital aims and objectives intended by
policymakers is a question that has not yet been answered. To answer this question, one must first
look to government documents to determine what policies government is promoting.
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1. EU PEACE I Program 1995-1999
The earliest victims policies came prior to the signing of the Good Friday Agreement, and therefore
prior to the establishment of the Northern Ireland Assembly, in the form of the European Unions
PEACE I Program. Officially, it is known as the European Unions Special Support Program for Peace
and Reconciliation in Northern Ireland and the six Border Counties of Ireland (SEUPB, 1994:1). In
total, the program was allocated 500 million or approximately 340 million from the EU to cover a
range of projects to run from 1995 through 1999 (SEUPB, 1994:1). The idea of the PEACE I Program
was to involve people at the grass roots level and to focus on those areas and sections of the
population most affected by the conflict (SEUPB, 1994:1). In other words, the program was designed
to engage civil society and marginalized members of society in governance processes. The strategic
aim of the program was to reinforce progress towards a peaceful and stable society and promote
reconciliation by focusing on four key areas: social inclusion, cross-border cooperation, economic
development and employment, and urban and rural regeneration (SEUPB, 1994:1). In total, the
PEACE I Program funded over 13,000 projects in Northern Ireland through the work of community and
voluntary groups, most of which fell under the theme of social inclusion (SEUPB, 1994:1). The target
groups of this program were victims, ex-prisoners, women and youth. This early focus on addressing
the needs of those affected by the conflict ignited a policy focus on social inclusion, victim support and
promoting civic engagement in governance processes. By most accounts, the PEACE I Program was
highly successful in achieving these aims.
Indeed, the PEACE I Program enabled civil society to increase social inclusion through
encouraging grassroots organizations to play a vital role in the conflict resolution and peacebuilding
processes (Buchanan, 2008:392). This aim was promoted by the District Partnerships, who were
responsible for identifying promising groups and awarding funding to those groups to help them
develop grassroots initiatives (Acheson and Milofsky, 2008: 71-2). The government emphasis on
promoting social inclusion of marginalized groups (e.g. victims) was embedded in the EUs post-
Maastricht Treaty policy framework, which emphasized civil societys role in achieving the social
inclusion objective (Acheson and Milofsky, 2008:72). It has been observed that the strengths of the
PEACE I program were the de-marginalization of socially excluded members of society (e.g. victims),
and the empowerment of civil society to engage in governance processes related to peacebuilding and
conflict resolution (Buchanan, 2008:398). Many regard the PEACE I Program as having developed a
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platform for civil society to inform policymakers on a broad range of civic issues (cf. Guelke, 2003).
One problem with the policy, however, is that the EU did not provide any guidance on how civil
society could achieve the objective of promoting social inclusion, nor how government could monitor
and evaluate it. Some have claimed that PEACE I was a plan for reinvestment [] but without a
vision as to how this might contribute to peace and reconciliation (Harvey, 1997). This is evidenced
by the fact that many of Northern Irelands civic organizations, especially victims groups, maintained a
single- identity focus. As a result, the Program did not have a discernable effect on the relationships
between Northern Irelands two communities (cf. PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2003). Although the
PEACE I program saw single-identity work as a legitimate contribution to the overall peace objectives,
it was clear from the evaluations of PEACE I that a less exclusive approach to community engagement
was necessary to meet the strategic aim of social inclusion (cf. PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2003).
Thus, the aims of PEACE II were broadened with a focus on developing the social capital of civil
society.
2. EU PEACE II Program 2000-2004 and PEACE II+ 2005-2006
Towards the end of 1999 and upon completion of the EUs PEACE I Program, the Special EU
Programs Body (SEUPB) determined that there was a continued need to reinforce progress towards a
peaceful and stable society and to promote reconciliation (SEUPB, 2006:1). Thus, from 2000 to 2004,
another531 million (approximately 370 million) was allocated to projects in Northern Ireland and the
six border counties of Ireland on a ratio of 80 percent in Northern Ireland to 20 percent in Ireland
(SEUPB, 2006:1). The two key aims of the PEACE II Program were to address the legacy of the
conflict and to take advantage of opportunities arising from the peace process (SEUPB, 2006:1). The
PEACE II Program had five main themes for which groups and individuals could apply for funding:
Economic renewal
Social integration, inclusion and reconciliation
Locally based regeneration and development
Outward and forward-looking region
Cross-border co-operation (SEUPB, 2006:2)
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Hence, the themes for projects under the PEACE II Program offered an extension of themes from the
PEACE I Program in the areas of social inclusion, economic renewal, cross-border cooperation and
regeneration with more of an emphasis on projects contributing to reconciliation. Significantly, over
5,300 projects were supported by PEACE II funding (SEUPB, 2006:2). Again, the majority of projects
funded were based on the theme of social inclusion (SEUPB, 2006).
A significant component of the PEACE II Program was its emphasis on building cross-
community relationships through civil society organizations (e.g. victim support groups). Drawing from
the criticisms on the heavy focus of single-identity work under PEACE I, the SEUPB tried to encourage
civil society to build bridging forms of social capital through cross-community engagement. In
particular, PEACE II focused on developing social capital through targeting support for victims and
other marginalized groups. However, the aims of increasing social inclusion through promoting social
capital development in civil society was stymied by an overly bureaucratic and finance-driven sector
(Buchanan, 2008) and a lack of clarity around key conceptual outputs of the program such as
reconciliation ( cf. Hamber and Kelly, 2009). Moreover, the leadership over the PEACE Program had
shifted from Brussels to Belfast, and fell victim to political divisions at Stormont (cf. Acheson and
Milofsky, 2008; Buchanan, 2008).
These problems led the SEUPB to revise some of its criteria for grants and in 2005 when the
EU announced an extension of funding for the PEACE II Program to add an additional 144 million for
projects through the end of 2006 (SEUPB, 2006:2). The idea behind the PEACE II Extension Program
was that it would provide more focused funding to civic organizations to promote the aforementioned
policy aims. Unfortunately, however, the bureaucratic nature of the Program was strengthened,
preventing genuine civic engagement with policymakers (cf. Buchanan, 2008). Additionally, there was
a lack of appropriate criteria from which to decide on grant allocation. It has been observed that while
PEACE I promoted participative democracy by enabling civil society to own the peace process, PEACE
II and PEACE II+ have led to a more top-down approach whereby decision-making processes were
taken over by the SEUPB and members of the Northern Ireland Executive (Buchanan, 2008:401). This
situation has had negative implications for attempts to engage civil society in governance processes.
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3. EU PEACE III Program 2007-2013
The EU allocated an additional 333 million for PEACE III to run from 2007-2013, to accommodate
projects that promote that strategic aims of the PEACE Program (SEUPB, 2007). The Program is
divided into two main priorities: 1) Reconciling Communities and 2) Contributing to a Shared Society
(SEUPB, 2007). It delivers these priorities through four themes: to build positive relations at the local
level; to acknowledge the past; to create shared public spaces; and to develop key institutional
capacity for a shared society (SEUPB, 2007). These themes, which require a significant combination
of single-identity and cross-community work, draw from the theoretical underpinnings of social capital.
Thus, it is clear that PEACE III strives to continue to promote social inclusion and social capital
development policies.
While maintaining the original strategic aims of the PEACE Programs, PEACE III enhanced the
themes of building social capital through promoting better community relations and social inclusion. It
is believed that PEACE III will be the last EU installment for Northern Ireland, although there has been
speculation about PEACE IV. If PEACE III is the last peace money installment for Northern Ireland, it
will have a significant impact on the sustainability of civic organizations, victims services and civil
societys ability to participate in governance processes. If civic organizations (e.g. victim support
groups) cannot sustain themselves financially once PEACE III funding has expired, there is a strong
probability that many groups will dissolve and there will be less civic engagement in governance
processes as a result. This impact will be discussed in the findings and discussion sections of this
paper.
4. Northern Ireland Assemblys Victims Strategy 2009 2019
One final policy development worth mentioning is the Northern Ireland Assemblys Victims Strategy.
The Victims Strategy develops a victims centred approach built around three institutions: the
Commission for Victims and Survivors, the Victims and Survivors Forum and the new Victims and
Survivors Service (OFMDFM, 2009b:3). The Commission has been operational since 2008 and the
Forum has been through a pilot and transitional phase since 2009. In 2008, the government began
consultation with the Commission for a new Victims and Survivors Service that [would] replace all
current arrangements under which OFMDFM provides funding to the sector (OFMDFM, 2009a:3). The
idea is that the new strategy would be more comprehensive and responsive to the needs of individual
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victims and survivors and the groups and organisations that work in this area (OFMDFM, 2009a:3).
According to this new strategy, the Victims and Survivors Service would be responsible for providing
support for individuals and groups and would provide that support in response to assessed and agreed
need. The draft strategy links the work of the Commission and the Forum to the new Service
(OFMDFM, 2009:5). It is anticipated that the Service will replace the Community Relations Councils
Core Funding Scheme (CFS), the Development Grant Scheme (DGS) and the Northern Ireland
Memorial Fund (NIMF), and will allocate funding in a transparent and open way in accordance with a
clear and published criteria (OFMDFM, 2009a:12).
The aims of the Service, therefore, are: to provide better coordination of funding; to provide
clearer links between support provided and actual needs; to use resources more efficiently; to develop
sustainability; to improve good practice in the sector; to produce better outcome of outputs; to better
understand individual needs; and to provide better evaluation of services (OFMDFM, 2009a:13). The
remit of the Victims and Survivors Service falls under the Commission for Victims and Survivors
(OFMDFM, 2009a:19). Thus, the Commission, through its three branches (the Commission, the Forum
and the Service), will hold the majority of responsibility for victim support once all three branches are
operational.
While the proposals for the new Service would seemingly provide a much more comprehensive
and cohesive approach to victims services, there have been serious delays in getting the Service off
the ground. It was initially anticipated that the Service would be functioning by 2010. However, due to
a series of delays for which it is unclear who is responsible it is more likely that the Service will
begin operating in mid-2012 at the earliest. Although the remit of the Service would appear to
streamline funding and services for victims and victim support groups, at this stage, no one apart from
a couple of Junior Ministers at the OFMDFM and the Commission really knows how it will function.
Although the Victims Strategy recognizes the value of victims groups and expresses the need
to engage victims with policymaking (OFMDFM 2009b:3), the strategy funnels the majority of funding
through the Victims Service and has excluded the majority of victims and victims groups from the pilot
and transitional Forums. This has resulted in significant fears within victim support groups, as will be
discussed in the next section, that the Service will draw funding away from civil society into a
bureaucratic government institution; the implications of which will result in the dissolution of many
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groups, and the destruction of the social capital developed by the groups. If these fears are confirmed,
the outcome will have a significant impact on the social inclusion and social capital policies promoted
under the PEACE Programs. Thus, it would appear that the current state of victims policy has met a
paradigm shift which may further deteriorate the social capital of civil society, and therefore, the levels
of civic engagement in governance processes. This theme will be explored in the next section of this
paper.
V. Findings
The findings presented in this section of the paper come from the data collected during the interviews
with victim support group leaders in the Compromise study. There are three key findings that relate to
the theme of this paper. First, the data from the Compromise study shows evidence that victim
support groups do contribute to social inclusion of victims. Second, victims groups contribute to social
inclusion by building high levels of social capital. The Compromise study found high levels of both
bonding and bridging forms of social capital in victim support groups. Finally, the data shows that both
victims group leaders and policymakers are concerned about the destruction of social capital and the
loss of a public platform for engagement with government as a result of the new Victims Strategy.
This section will explore these findings.
1. Victims groups and social inclusion
The first significant finding of the Compromise study is that victim support groups do contribute to the
policy aims of increasing social inclusion of victims. Out of the twenty-five victims groups that
participated in this research project, there was sufficient evidence that all of them helped victims in
their groups to overcome social isolation and marginalization. The means by which victims groups
achieved the social inclusion objective were generally through activities such as befriending, social
functions (e.g. coffee mornings), respite trips and outings, as well as group counseling. Indeed, there
was strong evidence that victims in victim support groups benefited from the strong social network that
exists within the groups. The groups, in many cases, were like surrogate families for victims a place
where victims could go where others had experienced similar trauma and could therefore understand
each other. One leader described his group as providing a place where people can come and were
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all in the same situation. We all know each other and we are secure together. Before this [group], they
wouldnt go anywhere because they werent confident (personal interview, 16 June 2011). This type
of in-group bonding undoubtedly has benefits for helping victims overcome social exclusion.
However, an interesting finding from the study also shows that although victim support groups
have the ability to contribute to social inclusion of victims, too much in-group bonding has the reverse
affect in other words, it contributes to social isolation of group members. This was found to be truein groups whose focus was exclusively on single-identity work within a small community. This finding
supports Putnams constrict theory (2007) which states that too much in-group bonding will cause
group members to hunker down and become not only less trusting of those that are unlike them (e.g.
the othercommunity), but also, they will become less trusting of those who are like them (e.g. ones
own community). This finding has significant implications for policies aimed at promoting social
inclusion and social capital.
Another outcome of victim support groups that has negative implications for the social inclusion
agenda is that while members of groups benefited from high levels of social inclusion, the same could
probably not be said of victims in communities who do not belong to groups. While the research on
victims group leaders did not extend to victims in communities who were not part of groups, it was
believed by a number of group leaders that these victims without a social network were less likely to
benefit from the social inclusion that the groups offered. One group leader explained: I was struck by
the high percentage of people who were immediate victims that were not members of some
organization. Why is that? So there is this issue ofpart of it is I dont want anyone else to know
whats going onbut it also comes down to the fact that they felt so demoralized and so betrayed to a
degree by things they had placed a lot of trust in that they found it difficult to try to place that trust in
something again. That was the first task I set about, trying to get those individuals involved with this
organization, and thankfully they did and they have stayed with it. Theres a remarkable change with
some of these people (personal interview, 6 June 2011).
The findings in relation to social inclusion, therefore, were mixed. While all the groups
increased the social inclusion of group members, there were two dangers associated with the groups.
The first danger is that members of the groups became socially isolated from the rest of society
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because of too much in-group bonding. The second danger is that victims not associated with groups
are unlikely to reap the benefits of social inclusion that the groups create. Implications on policy and
resolutions to these problems will be discussed later in this paper.
2. Victims groups and social capital
The ways in which victim support groups improved the social inclusion of victims in the Compromise
study were through the development of social capital. In fact, social capital development is one of the
key strengths of civic organizations, and this is especially true in victim support groups. This section
will look at how victims groups promoted social inclusion by building bonding and bridging forms of
social capital.
The main type of social capital developed by victim support groups in Northern Ireland is
bonding social capital. There are numerous reasons why this may be the case. First, victims groups
provide a platform for victims to bond around a shared identity: the victim identity. As one leader
noted, the group came together just as the name indicates to offer support to one another because
we had all come through a common suffering and there was that understanding that we wanted to
support each other (personal interview, 28 March 2011). This means that that groups provided a
supportive arena for victims to bond around their common suffering and around issues that affect
victims, such as social exclusion, welfare issues and the ongoing need to address their trauma through
counseling. In this sense, bonding of social capital can be seen as a positive outcome of the work of
these civic organizations.
The second reason why groups contribute to bonding of social capital is that the majority of
victims group leaders interviewed in this study perceived their role as one where they should engage
their members in bonding activities. In fact, the findings reveal that the majority of victims group
leaders saw one of their main roles as bonding social capital through single-identity work, and this
priority far exceeded any aspirations to bridge social capital through cross-community work. This
priority was explained by one leader: I think people have to be happy and content and proud of their
own existence and content and happy in their own skin. And if people are happy and content in their
own skin and comfortable in it then they can reach out. But until theyre happy...you can t do it
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(personal interview, 7 March 2011).Thus, although victims policy, as evident in the PEACE Programs,placed an emphasis on bridging social capital, victims groups have steadily engaged predominantly in
bonding social capital.
The fact that victims groups were found to be engaging primarily in bonding social capital
activities was observed by policymakers: Groups do tend to be exclusive to their own particular
community. They are not always open to the challenge of opening up and broadening their
perspective, unless there is a shared experience (personal interview, 9 May 2011). Policymakers also
found these types of groups to be problematic. Moreover, there was a noticeable aspiration on the
part of policymakers to encourage victims groups to move beyond bonding social capital. One
policymaker stated, I think you do need to protect them and safeguard people s rights to be single-
identity, but clearly to move society forward you would prefer it if everybody, and failing that, as many
possible are outreaching (personal interview, 7 July 2011). That policymakers were concerned about
victims groups continuing to build exclusive bonds and therefore fail to achieve the aims of the social
inclusion policy was clear. However, there were a significant number of groups that were also engaged
in bridging social capital.
While noticeably fewer group leaders seemed concerned with bridging social capital, there
were a few social engineers that saw their role as engaging their groups in a combination of single-
identity and cross-community work. These group leaders sought opportunities (and funding) to
establish and improve on relationships with groups from the othercommunity. The types of activities
that these group leaders promoted with their members including: cross-community residentials, story-
telling and dialog encounters, as well as artistic community projects, especially with youths. In
explaining how well cross-community storytelling projects have worked, one group leader noted: I
think that [building social trust] is at the heart of what we do. [] It is about how we build the social
capital, how we build the social trust. How we break down the barriers. Only through the sharing of
the stories, only through the getting to know the other, to understand to walk in the shoes of the other,
do the commonalities far outweigh the differences. [] Whenever you hear about people who have
been hurt through the Troubles or other people who are there because they want to bear witness.
That builds trust and it breaks down barriers (personal interview, 18 April 2011). In this sense, one
can see how powerful bridging social capital can be at peacebuilding and conflict resolution.
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The self-assessed evaluations of these cross-community projects were overwhelmingly
positive and could be said to have increased trust to a level where group leaders felt that they could
continue working on these cross-community relationships into the foreseeable future. Explaining how
the process of trust is built, one leader observed: I think when you are working with people from an
opposite point of view, you ll always find no matter how bitter they can be, or maybe how strong you
are about your position, there will always be something that each of you will have in common. No
matter what. It may be around sport and I think thats your building block. Your building block is, you
find something that the two of you have in common, because that begins the process of dialog
(personal interview, 14 February 2011). One can see from this excerpt that bridging social capital
through cross-community work can be as easy as finding a commonality between groups, such as
sport. Once a commonality is established, a trusting relationship can be developed.
It should be noted that policymakers were pleased with the bridging social capital that was
developed by victim support groups, but policymakers did not always seem to know how to promote
more bridging groups. In fact, one of the Victims Commissioners stated: So, you ask how do we do
anything about that and I say, very carefully. Weve got to continue to be respectful of victims and
accept their right to be where they are and at the same time set out for them how it might be in their
best interests, in my view it is in their best interests, for them to be open to more inclusive ways of
being and living. But at the same time there are just some people who are not fit for that and weve
got to respect that (personal interview, 21 July 2011). The response from this policymaker almost
seems defeatist with respect to the ability to encourage victims and victims groups to engage in
bridging social capital. This is unfortunate, given that the study revealed that there are a number of
group leaders who know how to engage victims in bridging social capital. Even where victims groups
were not engaged in bridging social capital, many group leaders expressed a desire to learn how to
engage their groups in these types of activities. Thus, if policymakers would capitalize on the group
leaders who know how to bridge social capital, this could spread to other civic organizations.
Although the aforementioned Victims Commissioner seemed uncertain about how to promote
more bridging of social capital in victims groups, he did explain what he thought the ideal group
should be doing: The role of victims groups should be to build community and maintain community
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along social networks among victims. To avoid isolation. To improve their sense of well-being. And
their sense of esteem and dignity. And also to uphold the quality of life they should be able to live and
to help society respond to victims needs and to help society move into a new generation that is
informed by the wisdom of the victim experience. For that to happen, victims have a contribution to
make in terms of building the future because those most wounded can engage in difficult conversations
out of which come social insights that will encourage other people who have been less directly
affected (personal interview, 21 July 2011). Thus, this policymaker seems to be encouraging the
social engineering that bridges social capital. At the same time, he is also suggesting that victims play
a key role in informing policymakers about building the future in other words, civil society should play
a role in government decision-making. This suggestion has major implications for civil societys role in
governance processes.
3. Perceptions of the Victims Strategy
The last significant finding of the Compromise study related to the theme of this paper is the leadership
and policymaker response to the Victims Strategy. One will recall that the Victims Strategy
establishes the new Victims Service as being at the apex of victims policy going forward. Thus, the
Victims Strategy departs from previous victims policy in two key respects. First, the Strategy moves
away from the group-centered approach to building social capital. Instead it pours funding into the
Service to handle victims services. This change in direction of victims policy also moves away from
the EU PEACE Program aims of promoting social inclusion. The implications of this change in policy
have been perceived by victims group leaders and some policymakers as having been ill-conceived
and poorly planned, at best. At worst, there are fears that the strategy will destroy the social capital
developed by victim support groups. If social capital is destroyed, this will have negative implications
on the social inclusion of victims and the promotion of civic engagement in governance processes.
In explaining the reasons behind the shift in policy from the PEACE Programs to the Victims
Strategy, one Victims Commissioner noted: I suppose an issue were on to right now is government
have wanted to move away from an approach to victims where money is being thrown at them. We
would support that. Money can corrupt and build conceit and develop a notion that people have a
right to everlasting grants. Were living in an age where the in the rest of society there wont be much
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sympathy for that (personal interview, 21 July 2011). While it is certainly true that the PEACE
Program policies did appear to be throwing money at victims without a clear sense of what was
expected for outcomes, this reversing trend of taking money away from the groups is equally, if not
more problematic. There was a significant fear in the leadership of victims groups that once the
PEACE III funding ends and the money is shifted to the Service, the sustainability of many groups will
collapse, and the social capital of the groups will collapse with them. As one victims group leader
opined:
I think government is moving to the new Victims Service, and for many people they cant quite grasp what thats going to
entail. If you want to call it the selling of it I guess you could say its going to be a one-stop shop where everythings
going to come from within. Its a nice label. Its attractive maybe from that point of view. But the devils in the detail
and I would have concerns that government because of its unwillingness to look at the evolution of individual victims
groups, what theyve started off with and where they
ve got their members to, where they want them to move them to the next phasetheyre not doing it that way. Theyre
coming up with an arbitrary set of priorities that they deem are in the best interest of the sector. Basically you fit within
that or youre gone. I think many people will say its a very purposeful exercise to streamline and to weed out the sector
(personal interview, 6 June 2011).
Thus, there are a number of concerns about how the Victims Strategy and the Service in particular will
affect the voluntary sector. For this reason, a number of victims group leaders and policymakers
expressed a desire to improve civic engagement with policymakers on victims issues.
The opinion of one Victims Commissioner was that victims groups are in a primary position to
inform the good of society. So weve got to find a wayin fact the 10 year Strategy envisages
working with the sector in a way that enables victims to play their part in building the future (personal
interview, 21 July 2011). Presumably, this policymaker was referring to the Victims Forum, which is
the strand of the Commission for Victims and Survivors work that involves victims and victims group
leaders to inform policymakers on victims issues. Unfortunately, however, the membership of the
Forum was highly selective. There was no process for victims and leaders to apply to the Forum;
members were appointed by the Commission on both the pilot and transitional Forums. This sentiment
is reflected by the following statement: There is a Forum for victims and survivors but it was a very
selective group for victims and survivors and they chose people for that Forum and I dont think that
was fair. There was certainly an outrage in this community that specific people who knew what to say
and who had close contacts with key people in government were the ones who were put on the Forum
and theres no advisory groups even in communities to feed into that (personal interview, 14 March
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2011). The findings from this project also revealed that policymakers had not yet considered how
members would be selected or even when the official Forum would begin. Therefore, the Forum has
been deemed by many victims and leaders to be unrepresentative of the victim constituency.
An additional concern of victims group leaders was that the change in policy had led to a
situation where government was no longer interested in engaging with the voluntary sector. One
leader suggested that government start listening to the voluntary sector: I think government policy
lacks connections to grassroots. Grassroots needs to be able to write to government and government
needs to listen. I heard the term joint up thinking and its a long way from the term and it actually
working between government and civil society (personal interview, 17 May 2011). Thus, the
leadership of victims groups and policymakers have both expressed concerns with the Victims
Strategy and have expressed a desire to engage victims and victims groups in policy decision-making.
The findings of the Compromise study, in relation to victims policy will be discussed in the next
section of this paper.
VI. Discussion and Recommendations
This paper reveals a number of problems that must be overcome in the case of Northern Ireland if
government and civil society are to form a symbiotic relationship with respect to victims policy. This
section will discuss each of the key issues raised in this paper and will present some resolutions to
these problems. Finally, this section will make some policy recommendations on what the government
can do to rectify these problems.
To begin, one will recall that the Northern Ireland Council for Voluntary Action (NICVA, 2006)
recommended in their policy manifesto that civil society should engage with government decision-
makers on policy. NICVA, recognizing that civic organizations possess the capacity to build social
trust through the development of social capital, believe that civil society is in a primary position to
promote social inclusion of marginalized groups (e.g. victims) and build social cohesion by breaking
down sectarianism. Civil society, they say, have a role and a responsibility to help build a shared
future.
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Nowhere is NICVAs policy more apparent than in the EUs PEACE Programs. The same
aims and objectives from NICVAs manifesto are listed in the PEACE Programs strategy and working
themes. This is not a coincidence. The framers of the PEACE Programs recognized the value of civic
organizations in peacebuilding and conflict resolution, and specifically built them into the design of
these programs to help build post-conflict Northern Ireland. Knowing that civil society had a lot to
offer, the EU PEACE Programs designers built in a platform for civil society to engage with
policymakers enabling civil society to own their peace process. The outcome of PEACE I was
seen as enormously successful in the aim of engaging civil society in governance processes. Since
PEACE I, however, there has been a disconnect between civil society and government.
It has been observed by some that PEACE II, II+ and III have failed to engage civil society in
participative democracy in the same way that PEACE I did because of the transfer of authority and
oversight from Brussels to Belfast (cf. Acheson and Milofsky 2008; Buchanan, 2008). This transfer of
power caused the programs to fall victim to political division and bureaucracy. As a result, civil society
gradually lost their platform for informing policy in Northern Ireland. Thus, even though PEACE II, II+
and III have all helped to encourage civil society to build social capital and improve social inclusion,
this work is diminished by governments lack of interest in listening to civil society.
Moreover, if PEACE III is in fact the last installment of funding to civil society to promote the
aims of peacebuilding and conflict resolution, this will have a major impact on the work and
sustainability of civic organizations. Civil society groups have become dependent on these grants, and
when the grants end, many groups will undoubtedly have to cease operations. Aside from the
economic impact this will have, there will also be a major loss of social capital built by the voluntary
sector. There is also firm evidence that the government is aiming to reduce the number of civil society
groups, especially victims groups, that seem to be duplicating services or otherwise failing to
contribute to government aims for victims policy.
The Victims Strategy also marks a significant move away from policies aimed at participative
democracy. The Victims Service is designed to be a one-stop shop for victims services that will be
based on a competitive tendering process. It will, as policymakers see it, reduce the duplication of
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victims services and provide a more cost-efficient approach to meeting victims needs. On the other
hand, because the Service will receive a gigantic portion of victims money that is government
money allocated to addressing victims issues this will mean that victim support groups will receive
fewer grants and many will have to close their doors to victims. There is also evidence that the
Victims Strategy is aimed at maintaining a bureaucratic focus, thereby further diminishing the public
platform for civil society to engage with policymakers. While it is understandable that government
wants to produce policies that have a greater chance of addressing victims needs in ways that failed
under the PEACE Programs, such a change in policy is analogous to throwing the baby out with the
bathwater.
Meanwhile, the fact that victim support groups may not be able to sustain their networks once
funding comes to an end in 2013 is highly problematic. The loss of the groups will mean a loss of
social capital and their ability to contribute to the social inclusion of victims. The loss of social capital
created by the groups will not only have an impact on the group members directly, but will have wider
societal affects. It has already been established by social scientists that high levels of social capital
are correlated with improved health and well-being, a decrease in the risk of dying from all causes,
improved socio-economic conditions, an increase in civic engagement and greater participative
democracy, and conflict resolution, while the affects of low levels of social capital are ill-health,
shortened life expectancy, a lack of trust, economic deprivation, a decline in civic engagement and
participative democracy, and the possibility to contribute to conflict (cf. Aldridge, et al., 2002; Berkman
and Glass, 2000; Herreros, 2004; Kawachi and Berkman, 2001; Nan, 2009; Putnam, 1993; 2000;
2007; Seeman, 2000; Wilkinson and Marmot, 2003; Varshney, 2001). Therefore, the diminution of
victims groups, and indeed, civil society, will have significant and predictable outcomes. In addition to
these negative outcomes, years of work towards improving social inclusion of marginalized members
of society and the ascent of social cohesion will also be lost.
Therefore, now is the time for policymakers to act to reverse these trends. There is evidence,
at least, that the Victims Commission wants victims to inform society about how to move forward,
but they have offered a limited platform to a handpicked group of victims and victims group leaders to
engage with policymakers. If policymakers within the Commission are genuinely concerned that civil
society should play a greater role in governance processes, they must find a way to overcome the
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fears of the sector that policymakers do not care about victims and do not want to hear from them.
One place that policymakers could start is by allowing victims and victims groups to apply for
positions on the Victims Forum on an alternating basis. This would ensure that government
decision-makers have an opportunity to hear from the voluntary sector, and that those informing policy
are representative of the entire victim constituency. Additionally, government should be ensuring
victims groups that their work will continue to be funded into the foreseeable future where groups have
demonstrated the ability to build high levels of social capital and social inclusion. Groups that are
found to be contributing to social exclusion (cf. constrict theory, Putnam, 2007) should be given the
opportunity to change their working programs or they should have their funding withdrawn for a time.
Finally, given that the Victims Commissioner recognized an ideal victims group working program, and
the Compromise studyfound group leaders that actively engaged their members in activities that built
on the Commissioners aims and objectives, it would be prudent to engage these leaders in policy
formation and training of other group leaders on how to build social capital and social inclusion.
VII. Conclusion: Lessons Learned
This paper examined the role of victims groups in achieving the government aims of conflict resolution
and reconciliation through the development of social capital. This paper presented Northern Ireland as
a case study to determine ways in which government policies aimed at building social capital for
conflict resolution processes could be strengthened through the voluntary sector, and specifically,
through victims groups. In doing so, this paper revealed the strengths and weaknesses of
government policy and the work of victim support groups in achieving the aims of government policy
for social capital development and broader peacebuilding aims, such as improving social inclusion of
marginalized groups.
The paper gave a brief explanation of the research design of the Compromise study that
contributed to the findings presented in this paper. Then, the proposed benefits of social capital
development for promoting social inclusion were presented, followed by an overview of relevant
victims policy in Northern Ireland. Next, the research findings from the Compromise Study, related to
the work of victim support groups in building social capital and increasing social inclusion of victims
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were revealed. The findings were followed by a discussion of the implications of the findings on the
effectiveness of victims policy in Northern Ireland, and wider universal policy implications. Finally, the
author drew some conclusions on the effectiveness of policy in the Northern Ireland case study and
presented some policy recommendations for Northern Ireland. So what does this mean for lessons on
promoting civic engagement in governance processes in South Africa and elsewhere?
Lessons learned
There are three universal lessons that can be learned from the policy and governance mistakes in
Northern Ireland. First, building a platform for civic engagement is crucial to promoting civic
participation in governance processes. Second, social capital development is crucial to meeting the
aims of building an inclusive, trusting and peaceful society that in engaged in participative democracy.
Third, a bureaucratic top-down approach to peacebuilding policy (e.g. the Victims Strategy) fails to
capitalize on the strengths of civil society, equating to a missed opportunity for government to be
informed by those with the greatest knowledge of societal issues. Each of these lessons have
implications not just for Northern Ireland, but also for South Africa and other post-conflict societies that
are looking to foster improved public engagement in governance processes.
1. If you build it, they will come
The proliferation of civic organizations and workers in the voluntary sector after the initiation of the
PEACE I Program is evidence that if government makes a commitment to building a platform for the
sector to engage with policymakers, civil society will come. Not only will they come, they will flourish.
One of the key lessons from the peacebuilding process in Northern Ireland is that the earliest part of
the peace process, which saw a huge upsurge in peace dividends, was so successful in part because
policymakers took an inclusive approach to peacebuilding. That is, they sought the knowledge of
grassroots civic organizations on how to promote the peacebuilding and conflict resolution aims of
improving social inclusion. Moreover, in distributing peace money to civil society groups to promote
policy aims, with relatively few strings attached, the government allowed civil society to own the
peace process. This sense of ownership in peacebuilding ignited some of the most productive work
towards conflict resolution in Northern Ireland.
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Thus, the success of the EU PEACE I Program and early stages of the peace process provide
a universal lesson for policymakers that if you build it, they will come. For societies that will not have
the same access to financial resources that Northern Ireland has had (e.g. 3 billion over two
decades), policymakers will need to come up with more creative solutions for providing the
infrastructure that enables civil society to engage with government decision-makers. One approach
might be to build upon the social capital resources of civil society.
2. Strengthening civil society by building social capital
Not all post-conflict societies will have access to the financial resources that Northern Ireland has had.
Still, there are a number of ways in which all post-conflict societies can strengthen civil society in order
to promote higher levels of civic engagement with policymakers. One approach that is proven by
social scientists to strengthen civil society is to build the social capital of civic organizations. The
Northern Ireland case study provides lessons on what to do and what not to do with respect to
developing social capital.
Social capital development is crucial to the aims of building an inclusive, trusting and peaceful
society. It has also been proven to contribute to higher levels of participative democracy. Countless
studies have shown the tremendous benefits of high levels of social capital and the devastating impact
of low levels of social capital. Thus, policymakers are provided with the emphasis for developing
policies aimed at increasing levels of social capital in civil society. In Northern Ireland, while some
policymakers sought to develop bonding and bridging forms of social capital through the work of civic
organizations in the hopes of promoting social inclusion, the political divisions at Stormont led to a
reversal in this policy. This was evident in the change from EU PEACE Program policies promoting
social inclusion and civic engagement, to the new Victims Strategy, which calls for more bureaucratic
decision-making and a de-emphasis on social inclusion and social capital themed strategies.
The impact of this shift in policy is that much of the social capital that was developed under the
PEACE Programs has been and will continue to diminish under the new Victims Strategy, unless
government acts quickly to reinstate policies aimed at promoting social capital in victims groups. It is
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this authors opinion that the government is right to move away from a policy that has created a
dependency of civil society on grant money. However, the decision to draw the PEACE Programs to a
close and filter victims money through the new Victims Service is like throwing the baby out with the
bathwater. There were problems with the PEACE Programs, to be sure, that led to a system of
dependency and mobilization for resources in the voluntary sector. Yet, the solution to these problems
should have been to find ways to build the social and human capital of the sector, drawing on the
willingness of volunteers, and the knowledge of leaders, rather than moving to a strategy that will cut
funding to groups, thereby ensuring their eventual failure. While there are certainly groups that
contribute to negative forms of social capital (cf. bad civil society, Chambers and Kopstein, 2001;
constrict theory, Putnam, 2007), there are quite a few groups that have been doing a lot of good work
in developing cross-community relationships and building social capital throughout society. These
groups, and the social capital that they have created will be diminished by the Victims Strategy.
Therefore, while Northern Irelands policymakers initially took a good approach to building
social capital in the PEACE Programs and other early policy initiatives, the move to the Victims
Strategy will effectively undo much of the social capital that was built in the past two decades. This is
rather unfortunate for the peace process, and should be taken as a lesson by other post-conflict
societies as to what not to do. Thus, the lessons learned from Northern Ireland in relation to social
capital are: 1) If government makes policies aimed at promoting social capital, the benefits are many
and long-lasting for peacebuilding, conflict resolution and participative democracy; 2) On the other
hand, if policymakers enact policies that eliminate the focus on social capital and drawing on the social
and human resources of civil society, the impact will be a diminution of social capital and civic
organizations. If civil society is diminished, it cannot effectively engage with policymakers in
governance processes. Therefore, policymakers should aim to promote the social capital development
of civil society, while also enabling a platform for civil society to inform policymaking.
3. Missed opportunities
The third lesson from Northern Ireland is that a bureaucratic top-down approach to peacebuilding
policy (e.g. the Victims Strategy) fails to capitalize on the strengths of civil society, equating to a
missed opportunity for government to be informed by those with the greatest knowledge of societal
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issues. The findings of the Compromise study on the leadership of victim support groups revealed that
there is substantial creativity, knowledge and capacity for building cross-community relations in the
victims sector. Yet, policymakers have failed to capitalize on the talents of this leadership, instead
focusing on bureaucratic top-down governance. The governments approach to policymaking, as
evidenced by the Victims Strategy, equates to a significant missed opportunity to draw upon the
talents of the voluntary sector to inform policymaking. In the authors view, this is a serious mistake in
policymaking, and should be reversed in Northern Ireland, and avoided in other post-conflict societies.
One paradox that came to light in the Compromise study is that although policymakers are
intent upon going forward with the Victims Strategy and administering victims funding through the
Victims Service, they also spoke about the need to hear from victims and the voluntary sector to
inform policymaking. This is ironic, given that the Victims Strategy effectively removes the platform
from which victims and victims groups have been able to engage with policymakers. Instead, it
introduces a bureaucratic top-down approach to governance. This leads the author to two possible
conclusions on the state of victims policy in Northern Ireland: 1) Either policymakers are just paying
lip service to the desire to include victims and civil society in decision-making processes; or 2)
Policymakers are ignorant of the impact that the Victims Strategy will have on removing civil societys
platform for informing government decision-making. Either way, this is the wrong approach to engage
civil society in governance processes.
Therefore, drawing on the three lessons learned, Northern Irelands policymakers should: 1)
Abandon policies which create a bureaucratic top-down approach to governance; 2) Return to policies
that promote the development of social capital and social inclusion of marginalized groups; and 3)
Rebuild the platform that enables civil society to engage with policymakers. This could be as simple
as improving the representation of the victim constituency in the Victims Forum (or from a wider
perspective, reinstating the Civic Forum) and continuing to fund civic organizations that have met the
criteria of developing social capital and promoting social inclusion of marginalized groups. Finally, the
lesson that a universal audience should take from Northern Ireland is that bureaucratic top-down
approaches to governance deplete civil societys engagement with policymaking. Therefore,
policymakers in other societies should consider ways in which they can provide a platform for civil
society to engage with policymakers on governance.
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Conclusion
There are no easy solutions to the problems inherent in post-conflict societies. What policymakers
need to remember, however, is that there is a wealth of knowledge that exists within civil society on
how to address peacebuilding and conflict resolution in post-conflict societies. Government must
enable civil society to inform policymakers on how to implement the best policies for building a shared
future. The analysis of Northern Irelands policy is beneficial for policymakers in South Africa because
it provides a comparative case study highlighting the most and least effective ways of engaging civil
society in governance processes. The lessons from Northern Ireland provide policy prescriptions for
government and practitioners on how to bridge the identified gaps in policy and practice in order to
foster improved civic engagement in governance processes.
VIII. Acknowledgements
The author would like to acknowledge the work of team members from the Compromise After Conflict
study at the University of Aberdeen, whose efforts have helped the author in her research and writing.
Specifically, the author would like to thank Professor John Brewer and Professor Bernadette Hayes for
their supervision and support throughout the authors doctoral work. Second, the author would like to
acknowledge the financial support of the Leverhulme Trust, without which, the research would not have
been possible. Finally, the author would like to thank the study participants who sacrificed much of
their valuable time to inform the research presented in this project. More information about the
Compromise After Conflictstudy including the South Africa, Northern Ireland and Sri Lanka case
studies can be accessed at http://www.abdn.ac.uk/compromise-conflict/.
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